Figure skater Adam Rippon will be eroticized synonymnsthe first openly gay man to compete for the United States in the Winter Olympics.
The 28-year-old celebrated qualifying for the Games, which take place in February in South Korea, in a tweet on Tuesday evening.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
He'll join twice national champion Nathan Chen and 2017 world junior champion Vincent Zhou to represent the U.S in figure skating.
SEE ALSO: The heartwarming moment a hockey player tells his dad he made the Olympics“I’m really grateful that the selection committee looked at my body of work over the last two seasons,” Rippon, who qualified over the weekend, told reporters.
Rippon will be the first openly gay male athlete to represent the U.S. at the Winter Olympics. As LGBTQ sports site Outsports points out, U.S. figure skating Olympian Johnny Weir never publicly declared his orientation until after retirement. Rippon will be joined at the Olympics by openly gay Canadian skater Eric Radford, and U.S. freestyle skier Gus Kenworthy is also hopeful to join the team.
Rippon has credited his coming out as having a significant impact on his successful figure skating career, attributing it to his winning the 2016 U.S. championships.
"When I came out, it was a huge reason of why I was able to win the U.S. championships in 2016."
"A few years ago, I made the decision to come out publicly as gay — spoiler alert," Rippon told U.S. Figure Skating in a promotional video. "I made that decision because I remember when I was younger, and I was unsure of who I was or afraid of what other people might think, I looked to other people who shared their stories."
"I feel like, when I came out, it was a huge reason of why I was able to win the U.S. championships in 2016 ... I was able to perform and genuinely show the judges and the audience who I was."
"I think being fearless is just unapologetically yourself," he said. "My secret weapon is: I really just am who I am when I go out there ... No one's going to get in my way because I have gotten out of my own way."
Rippon will hopefully pave the way for more American athletes to come out. According to Outsports, only seven of 2,900 athletes from 88 countries that competed at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics in Russia were out — all were women and not one was from the U.S.
Rippon's sexuality shouldn't matter at all. It shouldn't even be a headline. But significant discrimination against LGBTQ folks still exists, so this is a landmark we'd like to raise a toast to.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Go get 'em dude.
Topics LGBTQ Olympics Social Good
Microsoft's new Edge browser will support Chrome extensionsMicrosoft's new Edge browser will support Chrome extensionsBest tech gifts under $20Jack Dorsey responds to his tone deaf Myanmar vacation tweetsYep, Miley Cyrus is genuinely going to be in 'Black Mirror' Season 5Apple files appeal on iPhone sales ban in China'Star Trek' captains have rocked a bold look for 50 yearsAmtrak asks woman if she's still trapped in elevator months laterAirports unite for an 'Elf on the Shelf'YouTube Rewind 2018 is now the most disliked YouTube video of all timeFord looks beyond cars with purchase of shuttle service ChariotSingapore Paralympian gets swimming gold and smashes her own world recordNetflix's is testing an 'Instant Replay' feature that users dislikeEven the IRL store is an automated, digital experienceThe creator of 'Doom' is releasing nine new levels for free in 2019Demi Lovato now coGoogle to kill Google+ early after exposing personal data of more than 50 millionSex ed content censored by algorithms that think it's pornCalvin Harris says 'all hell broke loose' after Taylor Swift breakup. Well, duh.Someone left a human heart on a Southwest Airlines flight Redux: Not an After Poetry Is Doing Great: An Interview with Kaveh Akbar by Craig Morgan Teicher Staff Picks: Comics, Keys, and Chaos by The Paris Review They Really Lose: An Interview with Atticus Lish by Matthew Shen Goodman Skinning a Cat: On Writer’s Block by The Paris Review The Paris Review Podcast Returns by The Paris Review Cooking with Aglaja Veteranyi by Valerie Stivers Harvest Moon by Nina MacLaughlin En Garde by The Paris Review Redux: The Subway Back and Forth by The Paris Review Thanksgiving with John Ehle by Valerie Stivers Walking with Simone de Beauvoir by Annabel Abbs Does Technology Have a Soul? by Meghan O’Gieblyn The Review’s Review: Social Media in Reverse by The Paris Review Roadrunning: Joshua Clover in Conversation with Alex Abramovich by Alex Abramovich and Joshua Clover Cooking with Mary Shelley by Valerie Stivers This Year’s Prizewinners A Philosophical Game: An Interview with Saul Steinberg by Lauren Kane Redux: Plates Collapse by The Paris Review Sentience and Intensities: A Conversation with Maureen McLane by Anahid Nersessian
3.1293s , 10196.890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticized synonymns】,Miracle Information Network